The real cause of depression?

Published on

Johann Hari’s new book “Lost Connection: Uncovering the Real Causes of Depression” suggests something I’ve suspected for some time.  A narrative in which 1960s psychiatrists, believing science could answer all our ills, decreed that depression was all about chemical imbalances in the brain?  That it's all about serotonin.  

I'm not for a moment saying that there's no place for drugs.  But in the life I'm currently writing about (mine), external factors seem to have played the biggest role in my mental health.  When my life has felt like it had no meaning, I've struggled, as I have when threatened by life threatening disease. My father’s breakdown followed quickly my uncle's death and my brother’s was about a bullying boss.  

Exerpts from Hari’s book centre on finding meaning, on making deep and personal connections and on working together.  There's more to it than that -  David Rock identified status, certainty, autonomy, relatedness and fairness as the sort of threats we should think about.  But if it's right that 65%+ of the medicated sufferers are suffering again in a year, then the long, hard slog for meaning starts here! 

And how fortuitous that at the same time technology is threatening to wipe out 41% of jobs!  Where is everyone going to find meaning from?  This really does feel like a bit of a time bomb.   

Is everything you think you know about depression wrong?In this extract from his new book, Johann Hari, who took antidepressants for 14 years, calls for a new approach.

Related Articles

Wellbeing in the city

This feels like a cringey blog to be writing but please bear with me - it will be short.  Wellbeing in the city is a joint initiative between the Samari...

Sleep and its impact on our mental health, and just about everything else

In our training around mental health awareness we use a very simple model, a bucket, to describe our relationship with pressure and stress.  Into that b...

Vanessa Feltz

Now that's not a title I ever expected to give to a blog...Having had a chance to listen back to my interview with Vanessa Feltz this morning, I feel br...

Forbes: Tackling loneliness in remote working

Our expert Amanda Okill tells Forbes what actions organisations and individuals can take.